Method for Activating a Nucleic Acid for a Polymerase Reaction

ABSTRACT

The present invention concerns a method for activating a nucleic acid for a polymerase reaction with the steps: (a) Heating a nucleic acid to a temperature of 55° C. to 80° C., (b) cooling the nucleic acid to a temperature at which a polymerase shows no substantial decrease in activity, and (c) starting the polymerase reaction by the addition of a heat-labile polymerase to the nucleic acid.

The present invention concerns a method for activating a nucleic acid, in particular a deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), for a polymerase reaction, in particular a strand displacement reaction.

By a polymerase reaction, in the sense of the invention, is understood the polymerase activity of a nucleic acid polymerase, so the polymerisation of nucleotides at a free 3′-OH end whereby the complementary strand serves as a template. A strand lying possibly 3′ from the free 3′-OH-end can thereby either be displaced (strand displacement reaction, see below), or this can also be cleaved by a 5′-3′ exonuclease activity of the polymerase, and replaced by the newly synthesised strand (for example in a nick displacement reaction).

A strand displacement reaction (SDR) is a method by which a polymerase reaction with oligonucleotides can be started, whereby during the reaction a peeling off of the “old” strand (“strand displacement”) of a double-stranded nucleic acid can be affected by the other “old” (complementary) strand, in order to enable a bonding of oligonucleotides to the other “old” strand. What is important for the reaction is the initiation, whereby it is possible to differentiate various techniques:

-   (A) A separation of the two hybridised nucleic acid strands (e.g.     DNA strands) can take place through heat denaturing at 95° C. At     these temperatures the two DNA strands are demonstrably separated     from each other, so that oligonucleotides can bond to the denatured     (e.g. separated from each other) DNA strands. The initiation of the     SDR can then take place (e.g. protocol of the GenomiPhi-Kit,     Amersham Biosciences GmbH, Freiburg i. Br., Germany). This method     nevertheless has a substantial disadvantage: Heating to 95° C. leads     to damage to the DNA, e.g. by depurination or strand breakage     ((Suzuki T., Ohsumi S., Makino, K. (1994), Mechanistic studies on     depurination and apurinic site chain breakage in     oligodeoxyribonucleotides, Nucleic Acid Res. 22(23): 4997-5003). -   (B) A separation of the two hybridised nucleic acid strands (DNA     strands) can also take place through an alkali denaturation     (Protocol of the REPLI-g Kit, QIAGEN GmbH, Hilden, Germany).     However, this has the disadvantage, that after the addition of     alkali it has to be neutralised. This means additional pipetting     steps and a change in the reaction environment. -   (C) The next method does not try to achieve strand separation, but     rather it makes use of endonucleases to insert individual strand     breakages, at the 3′-OH end of which the polymerase reaction can     start (cf. e.g. U.S. Pat. No. 6,884,586). -   (d) Finally, a fourth method does not make use of denaturation, as     for example is described by Notomi T., Okayama H., Masubuchi H.,     Yonekawa T., Watanabe K., Amino N., Hase T. (2000), Loop-mediated     isothermal amplification of DNA, Nucleic Acids Res. 15; 28(12):E63.     However, this leads to clearly worse results, as presumably the     individual strand breakages contained in the DNA are used for the     elongation in an SDR.

The task of the present invention is therefore to specify a method for the activation of a nucleic acid, in particular a deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), for a strand displacement reaction, which does not feature the disadvantages of the prior art described above. The invention accomplishes this task through a method for activating a nucleic acid for a polymerase reaction with the steps:

-   -   (a) Heating a nucleic acid to a temperature of 55° C. to 80° C.,     -   (b) Cooling the nucleic acid to a temperature at which a         polymerase shows no substantial decrease in activity, and     -   (c) Starting the polymerase reaction by the addition of a         polymerase to the nucleic acid.

The polymerase being used can be heat-labile or heat-stable. On using a heat-stable polymerase, the method according to the invention for activating a nucleic acid for a polymerase reaction can alternatively include the step:

-   -   (a) Heating the nucleic acid together with a heat-stable         polymerase to a temperature of 55° C. to 80° C.

Further advantageous embodiments of the present invention are given in the claims, the description, the examples and the drawing.

In what follows, some of the terms used will be better described.

Strand Displacement Reaction (SDR): Strand displacement reaction is here understood as meaning every reaction in which one polymerase is used which features a strand displacement activity, or in which a reaction condition is used which makes strand displacement possible. Examples of these are strand displacement amplification (SDA), just like multiple displacement amplification (MDA) or rolling circle amplification (RCA) as well as all subsidiary forms of these reactions, like e.g. restriction-aided RCA (RCA-RCA) or MDA with nested primers, linear and exponential strand displacement reactions or also helicase-dependent amplification (cf. e.g. European patent applications nos. 20050112639, 20050074804, 20050069939 and 20050069938, as well as Wang G., Maher E., Brennan C., Chin L., Leo C., Kaur M., Zhu P., Rook M., Wolfe J. L., Makrigiorgos G. M. (2004), DNA amplification method tolerant to sample degradation, Genome Res. November; 14(11):2357-2366; Milla M. A., Spears P. A., Pearson R. E., Walker G. T. (1998), Use of the restriction enzyme AvaI and exo-Bst polymerase in strand displacement amplification, Biotechniques Mar; 24(3):392-396; Nagamine K., Watanabe K., Ohtsuka K., Hase T., Notomi T. (2001), Loop-mediated isothermal amplification reaction using a nondenatured template, Clin Chem. 47(9):1742-1743; Notomi et al 2001 (see above); Lage J. M., Leamon J. H., Pejovic T., Hamann S., Lacey M., Dillon D., Segraves R., Vossbrinck B., Gonzalez A., Pinkel D., Albertson D. G., Costa J., Lizardi P. M. (2003), Whole genome analysis of genetic alterations in small DNA samples using hyperbranched strand displacement amplification and array-CGH, Genome Res. 13(2):294-307; and Vincent M., Xu Y., Kong H. (2004), Helicase-dependent isothermal DNA amplification, EMBO Rep. 5(8):795-800).

Strand-Displacement-Polymerase: All polymerases which can carry out a strand displacement are strand displacement polymerases. Examples of these are enzymes like phi29-DNA-Polymerase, Cp-1-DNA-Polymerase, PRD1-DNA-Polymerase, phi15-DNA-Polymerase, phi21-DNA-Polymerase, PZE-DNA-Polymerase, PZA-DNA-Polymerase, Nf-DNA-Polymerase, M2Y-DNA-Polymerase, B103-DNA-Polymerase, SF5-DNA-Polymerase, GA-1-DNA-Polymerase, Cp-5-DNA-Polymerase, Cp-7-DNA-Polymerase, PR4-DNA-Polymerase, PR5-DNA-Polymerase, PR722-DNA-Polymerase, L17-DNA-Polymerase, Klenow DNA-Polymerase, Vent DNA Polymerase, Deep Vent DNA Polymerase, Bst DNA Polymerase, 9oNm™ DNA Polymerase, Polymerase III-Systeme and Bca DNA Polymerase. The strand displacement polymerases can also be present in mutated form, e.g. as so-called exominus variants (i.e. without exonuclease activity).

DNA: Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) occurs naturally in organisms, but it can also occur outside of organisms or could have been added to these. The length of the DNA can differ. DNA can be modified by mutations. The DNA bases can be modified. The nucleic acid can contain base analogues (e.g. also non-purine or non-pyrimidine analogues) or nucleotide analogues (e.g. PNA). DNA can contain attachments like e.g. proteins or amino acids.

The present invention therefore concerns a method for activating a nucleic acid (in particular a double-stranded DNA) for a strand displacement reaction, whereby the method comprises the following steps: (a) Heating the nucleic acid to a (moderate, in comparison to the conventional method) temperature of 55° C. to 80° C.; (b) cooling the nucleic acid to a temperature at which a polymerase shows no substantial decrease in activity; and (c) starting the strand displacement reaction by the addition of a polymerase to the nucleic acid. The high temperature of 95° C., applied in a method used until now, which, as is described above, has a negative effect inasmuch as a nucleic acid adopted (e.g. DNA) is substantially damaged by strand breakages and depurination, can be avoided with the method according to the invention. The separation of double-stranded nucleic acids by means of alkali treatment with correspondingly disadvantageous attendant circumstances can also be foregone with the new method. The method according to the invention therefore offers a possibility to prepare and carry out a strand displacement reaction while conserving the nucleic acid adopted. The method according to the invention is preferably then adopted, if a heat-labile polymerase comes to be used. In the case of the present invention, a polymerase is called heat-labile if it only features an activity of maximum 20% of the initial activity after 10 minutes of treatment at 65° C., i.e. if the polymerase has been at least 80% inactivated.

The variant described above is preferably then adopted, if a heat-labile polymerase comes to be used. If, however, a heat-stable polymerase is used, which endures at least a short-term heating up to 80° C., preferably up to 70° C., and especially preferably up to 65° C. without noteworthy loss of activity, then this can be added already at step (a), and cooling of the reactants before addition of the polymerase can be omitted. The alternative method therefore comprises step (a) heating the nucleic acid to a (moderate, in comparison to the conventional method) temperature of 55° C. to 80° C. In the sense of the present invention, heat-stable polymerases are understood as meaning all non-heat-labile polymerases.

The moderate temperature, to which the cells or isolated DNA are heated, lies in between 55° C. and 80° C., preferably 60° C. and 70° C. and especially preferably at 65° C. The heating of the DNA of the cells can take place directly in the SDR reaction mixture, for example.

The invention describes an activation of a nucleic acid (in particular DNA) for a strand displacement reaction by means of a moderate heating step. The method according to the invention correspondingly comprises the following partial steps as part of the use of isolated nucleic acid (DNA) and a heat-labile strand displacement polymerase: (1) The nucleic acid (DNA) is heated to a moderately high temperature. (2) The nucleic acid (DNA) is cooled down, whereby the temperature after the cooling process may have as its maximum temperature one at which the polymerase does not yet clearly lose its activity. The nucleic acid is preferably cooled down to a temperature of 4° C. to 45° C., especially preferably to a region of 15° C. to 42° C. and really especially preferably to a region of 25° C. to 37° C. (3) The SDR reaction is started by the addition of the (heat-labile) polymerase.

The variant described above is preferably then adopted, if a heat-labile polymerase is used. But should a heat-stable polymerase be adopted, then this can already be added at step (1).

The method according to the invention can be used not only for pure or purified DNA, but also for DNA which is still contained in a cellular bond. The method for the use of DNA which is still contained in the cellular bond, and of a heat-labile strand displacement polymerase, correspondingly has the following partial steps: (1) The nucleic acid (DNA) is heated to a moderately high temperature. (2) The cells containing DNA are cooled down, whereby the temperature after the cooling process may have as its maximum temperature one at which the polymerase does not yet clearly lose its activity. (3) The SDR reaction is started by the addition of polymerase.

In both methods the heat-labile strand displacement polymerase can also be replaced by a heat-stable strand displacement polymerase. Then the partial step (1) can be carried out directly with the polymerase.

The diagrams show:

FIG. 1 The yield of the reactions from example 1;

FIG. 2 The Ct values of the real-time PCR from example 1;

FIG. 3 The yield of the reactions from example 2;

FIG. 4 The Ct values of the real-time PCR from example 2;

FIG. 5 The Ct values of the real-time PCR from example 3;

FIG. 6 The yield of the reactions from example 4;

FIG. 7 The Ct values of the real-time PCR from example 4;

FIG. 8 The Ct values of the real-time PCR from example 5;

FIG. 9 The Ct values of the real-time PCR of the locus 11/12 from example 6;

FIG. 10 The Ct values of the real-time PCR of the locus 665 from example 6.

The invention is described more closely in the following by means of examples.

EXAMPLE 1

The example should show that by a simple temperature activation step an SDR (here a multiple displacement amplification, MDA) starting with whole blood is made possible, which as regards the DNA yield and the DNA quality is comparable to a reaction according to the prior art (control reaction).

Reaction according to the invention: the MDA reaction was carried out with the REPLI-g reagents (QIAGEN GmbH, Hilden, Germany). 0.5, 1 and 2 μl of whole blood as appropriate, stabilised by EDTA or citrate, were brought up to a volume of 39.5 μl with 12.5 μl 4× reaction mix (this contains oligonucleotides with a random sequence, reaction buffer solution and dNTPs) and water, and subsequently heated to 65° C. After cooling down to room temperature (around 20-25° C.), the DNA polymerase from the REPLI-g kit was added. The reaction was then carried out at 30° C. for 6 h.

Control reaction according to the prior art: the MDA reaction was carried out with the REPLI-g reagents (QIAGEN): 0.5 μl whole blood, stabilised by EDTA, was displaced with 2.5 μl phosphate-buffered salt solution (PBS, from the REPLI-g Kit from QIAGEN). Subsequently, 3.5 μl of the freshly-added denaturation buffer solution (360 mM KOH, 9 mM EDTA, 100 mM DTT) was added to it and incubated on ice for 10 min. The mixture was neutralised after incubation with solution B (REPLI-g kit). The mixture was brought up to a volume of 49.5 μl with 12.5 μl 4× reaction mix from the REPLI-g kit (this contains oligonucleotides with a random sequence, reaction buffer solution and dNTPs) and distilled water. After that, 0.5 μl of the DNA polymerase from the REPLI-g kit was added. The reaction was then carried out at 30° C. for 6 h.

After the end of the reaction, the DNA concentration was measured with PicoGreen according to the manufacturer's protocol (Molecular Probes Inc., Eugene, Oreg., USA). 10 ng of the MDA-DNA was inserted for a real-time PCR (polymerase chain reaction). 4 different loci was investigated for their representation in the amplificat:

(a) a sequence which was named Sat (Primer sequences:

Sat1.1 TCTTTCCACTCCATTGCAT and Sat1.2 GGAATGGAATCAACCCAA (b) a sequence from the β-actin gene

Primer 1 GTCTCAAGTCAGTGTACAGG Primer 2 GTGATAGCATTGCTTTCGTG (c) a sequence which emanates from the locus named “1004”

(Test: TGATGGCATTACTGGCACTTTGAGTTTTAC, Primer 1: GTCTTTAGCTGCTGAGGAAATG, Primer 2: AGCAGAATTCTGCACATGACG) and (d) a sequence which emanates from the locus named “699”

(Test: TGAACTGCTCCTTGGCAGGGATTT, Primer 1: TGCTCCCTGTCCCATCTG, Primer 2: AGACAGTATGCCTTTATTTCACCC).

The real-time PCR reactions were carried out in the QuantiTect Master Mix (QIAGEN) according to the protocol instructions.

The representation of the loci in the amplified DNA was measured in Ct values (threshold cycles=Ct). The Ct value is the PCR cycle in the real-time PCR, by which the fluorescence signal can be measured for the first time. The relative frequency of a sequence in the test can therefore be ascertained by the Ct value. If, for example, a Ct value is 1 cycle smaller than in a comparison test, then this value corresponds to an initial quantity of DNA in the test run approximately 2-times higher than in the control run for the sequence measured.

The result of example 1 can be summarised as follows: (1) The yield from the reactions in which the DNA was activated according to the invention by a 65° C. step is comparable to the yield from the control reaction. (2) The representation of the sequences in the amplified DNA is also comparable, if 0.5 μl of blood is added. Solely the sequence of the Sat locus is lower than in the control reaction. (3) Larger volumes than 0.5 μl have an inhibiting effect on the MDA reaction with 65° C. activation. This can be seen from the higher Ct values (i.e. worse representation of the sequences in the amplified DNA).

The yield of the reactions from example 1 is depicted graphically in FIG. 1. FIG. 2 show the Ct values of the real-time PCR from example 1.

EXAMPLE 2

This example serves to show that too low temperatures during a temperature activation step can impair the quality of the DNA which arises during the SDR.

Reaction according to the invention: the MDA reaction was carried out with the REPLI-g reagents (QIAGEN): 0.5 μl whole blood, stabilised by EDTA, was brought up to a volume of 39.5 μl with 12.5 μl 4× reaction mix (this contains oligonucleotides with a random sequence, reaction buffer solution and dNTPs) and water and activated by various temperatures (30, 40, 45, 50, 55, 60 and 65° C.). After cooling down to room temperature (around 20-25° C.), the DNA polymerase from the REPLI-g kit was added. The reaction was carried out at 30° C. for 6 h.

Control reaction according to the prior art: the MDA reaction was carried out with the REPLI-g reagents (QIAGEN): 0.5 μl whole blood, stabilised by EDTA, was displaced with 2.5 μl PBS (REPLI-g kit). Subsequently, 3.5 μl of the freshly-added denaturation buffer solution (360 mM KOH, 9 mM EDTA, 100 mM DTT) was added to it and incubated on ice for 10 min. The mixture was neutralised after incubation with solution B (REPLI-g kit). The mixture was brought up to a volume of 49.5 μl with 12.5 μl 4× reaction mix from the REPLI-g kit (this contains oligonucleotides with a random sequence, reaction buffer solution and dNTPs) and distilled water. After that, 0.5 μl of the DNA polymerase from the REPLI-g kit was added. The reaction was carried out at 30° C. for 6 h.

After the end of the reaction, the DNA concentration was measured with PicoGreen according to the manufacturer's protocol (Molecular Probes). 10 ng of the MDA-DNA were added for a real-time PCR. 2 different loci were investigated for their representation in the amplificat:

(a) a sequence which emanates from the locus named “1004”

(Test: TGATGGCATTACTGGCACTTTGAGTTTTAC, Primer 1: GTCTTTAGCTGCTGAGGAAATG and Primer 2: AGCAGAATTCTGCACATGACG), as well as (b) a sequence which emanates from the locus named “699”

(Test: TGAACTGCTCCTTGGCAGGGATTT, Primer 1: TGCTCCCTGTCCCATCTG, Primer 2: AGACAGTATGCCTTTATTTCACCC).

The real-time PCR reactions were carried out in the QuantiTect Master Mix (QIAGEN) according to the protocol instructions.

The representation of the loci in the amplified DNA was measured in Ct values (threshold cycles=Ct). The Ct value is the PCR cycle in the real-time PCR, by which the fluorescence signal can be measured for the first time. The relative frequency of a sequence in the test can therefore be ascertained by the Ct value. If, for example, a Ct value is 1 cycle smaller than in a comparison test, then this value corresponds to an initial quantity of DNA in the test run approximately 2-times higher than in the control run for the sequence measured.

The result of example 2 can be summarised as follows: (1) The yield from the reactions in which the DNA was activated according to the invention by a 30 to 65° C. step is comparable to the control reaction. (2) The representation of the sequences in the amplified DNA is also only somewhat worse than in the control reaction, if the activation is carried out at 60 or 65° C. With an activation of the DNA for the strand displacement reaction under 60° C., the representation of the observed sequences becomes worse.

The yield of the reactions from example 2 is depicted graphically in FIG. 3. FIG. 4 shows the Ct values of the real-time PCR from example 2.

EXAMPLE 3

In should be shown in this example that within specific temperature boundaries a simple temperature activation before the SDR does not affect the quality of the DNA arising in the SDR in comparison to a reaction according to the prior art (control reaction).

Reaction according to the invention: the MDA reaction was carried out with the REPLI-g reagents (QIAGEN). 0.5 μl whole blood, stabilised by EDTA, was brought up to a volume of 39.5 μl with 12.5 μl 4× reaction mix (this contains oligonucleotides with a random sequence, reaction buffer solution and dNTPs) and water, and activated by various temperatures (60, 65, and 70° C.). After cooling the reaction composition down to room temperature (around 20-25° C.), the DNA polymerase from the REPLI-g kit was added. The reaction was carried out at 30° C. for 6 h.

Control reaction according to the prior art: the MDA reaction was carried out with the REPLI-g reagents (QIAGEN): 0.5 μl whole blood, stabilised by EDTA, was displaced with 2.5 μl PBS (REPLI-g kit). Subsequently, 3.5 l of the freshly-added denaturation buffer solution (360 mM KOH, 9 mM EDTA, 100 mM DTT) was added to it and incubated on ice for 10 min. The mixture was neutralised after incubation with solution B (REPLI-g kit). The mixture was brought up to a volume of 49.5 μl with 12.5 μl 4× reaction mix from the REPLI-g kit (this contains oligonucleotides with a random sequence, reaction buffer solution and dNTPs) and with distilled water. After that, 0.5 μl of the DNA polymerase from the REPLI-g kit was added. The reaction was carried out at 30° C. for 6 h.

After the end of the reaction, the DNA concentration was measured with PicoGreen according to the manufacturer's protocol (Molecular Probes). 10 ng of the MDA-DNA were added for a real-time PCR. 4 different loci were investigated for their representation in the amplificat:

(a) a sequence which emanates from the locus named “1004”

(Test: TGATGGCATTACTGGCACTTTGAGTTTTAC, Primer 1: GTCTTTAGCTGCTGAGGAAATG, Primer 2: AGCAGAATTCTGCACATGACG) and (b) a sequence which emanates from the locus named “699”

(Test: TGAACTGCTCCTTGGCAGGGATTT, Primer 1: TGCTCCCTGTCCCATCTG, Primer 2: AGACAGTATGCCTTTATTTCACCC). c) a sequence which was named Sat

(Primer sequences: Sat1.1 TCTTTCCACTCCATTGCAT and Sat1.2 GGAATGGAATCAACCCAA (d) a sequence from the β-actin gene

Primer 1 GTCTCAAGTCAGTGTACAGG Primer 2 GTGATAGCATTGCTTTCGTG

The real-time PCR reactions were carried out in the QuantiTect Master Mix (QIAGEN) according to the protocol instructions.

The representation of the loci in the amplified DNA was measured in Ct values (threshold cycles=Ct). The Ct value is the PCR cycle in the real-time PCR, by which the fluorescence signal can be measured for the first time. The relative frequency of a sequence in the test can therefore be ascertained by the Ct value. If, for example, a Ct value is 1 cycle smaller than in a comparison test, then this value corresponds to an initial quantity of DNA in the test run approximately 2-times higher than in the control run for the sequence measured.

The result can be summarised as follows. The representation of the sequences in the amplified DNA is partially better in the preparation according to the invention than in the control reaction, if the activation is carried out at 60° C., 65° C. or 70° C.

FIG. 5 shows the Ct values of the real-time PCR analysis of DNA from the SDR reaction from example 3.

EXAMPLE 4

The example serves to show that by a simple temperature activation step an SDR (here a multiple displacement amplification, MDA) starting with isolated genomic DNA is made possible, which as regards DNA yield and DNA quality is comparable to a reaction according to the prior art (control reaction).

Reaction according to the invention: the MDA reaction was carried out with the REPLI-g reagents (QIAGEN). 2.5 μl of a solution of genomic DNA from human cells (concentration: 4 ng/μl) was brought up to a volume of 39.5 μl with 12.5 μl 4× reaction mix (this contains oligonucleotides with a random sequence, reaction buffer solution and dNTPs) and water, and activated by an incubation step at 65° C. After cooling the reaction composition down to room temperature (around 20-25° C.), the DNA polymerase from the REPLI-g kit was added. The reaction was carried out at 30° C. for 6 h.

Control reaction according to the prior art: the MDA reaction was carried out with the REPLI-g reagents (QIAGEN). 2.5 μl genomic DNA from human cells (concentration: 4 ng/μl) were displaced by 2.5 μl freshly-added denaturation buffer solution (50 mM KOH, 1.25 mM EDTA) and incubated for 3 min at room temperature. The mixture was neutralised after incubation with a 1:10 dilution of solution B (REPLI-g kit). The mixture was brought up to a volume of 49.5 μl with 12.5 μl 4× reaction mix from the REPLI-g kit (this contains oligonucleotides with a random sequence, reaction buffer solution and dNTPs) and distilled water. After that, 0.5 μl of the DNA polymerase from the REPLI-g kit was added. The reaction was carried out at 30° C. for 6 h.

After the end of the reaction, the DNA concentration was measured with PicoGreen according to the manufacturer's protocol (Molecular Probes). 10 ng of the MDA-DNA was added for a real-time PCR. 1 locus was investigated for representation in the amplificat:

(a) a sequence which emanates from the locus named “1004”

(Test: TGATGGCATTACTGGCACTTTGAGTTTTAC, Primer 1: GTCTTTAGCTGCTGAGGAAATG, Primer 2: AGCAGAATTCTGCACATGACG).

The real-time PCR reactions were carried out in the QuantiTect Master Mix (QIAGEN) according to the protocol instructions.

The representation of the loci in the amplified DNA was measured in Ct values (threshold cycles=Ct). The Ct value is the PCR cycle in the real-time PCR, by which the fluorescence signal can be measured for the first time. The relative frequency of a sequence in the test can therefore be ascertained by the Ct value. If, for example, a Ct value is 1 cycle smaller than in a comparison test, then this value corresponds to an initial quantity of DNA in the test run approximately 2-times higher than in the control run for the sequence measured.

The result was that the yield from the reactions in which the DNA was activated by a 65° C. step, was almost twice as high as in the control according to the prior art. The representation of the sequences in the amplified DNA is comparable in the test according to the invention and in the control test.

The yield of the reactions from example 4 is depicted graphically in FIG. 6. FIG. 7 shows the Ct values of the real-time PCR from example 4.

EXAMPLE 5

In this example it is shown that by a simple denaturation step at increasingly high temperatures, specific sequences can no longer be amplified in an SDR (here a multiple displacement reaction).

Test reactions: the MDA reaction was carried out with the REPLI-g reagents (QIAGEN): 10 ng isolated DNA was incubated at temperatures of 75° C., 85° C. or 95° C. for 10 min. Alternatively, an alkali denaturation was carried out in a KOH buffer solution in control reactions. After the chemical denaturation with KOH, the solution was neutralised, in order not to influence the MDA reaction conditions. Subsequent to the heat treatment or chemical denaturation, the solution containing DNA was brought up to a volume of 39.5 μl with 12.5 μl 4× reaction mix (this contains oligonucleotides with a random sequence, reaction buffer solution and dNTPs) and water. After that, the DNA polymerase from the REPLI-g kit was added to the reaction mixtures. The reaction was carried out at 30° C. for 6 h.

After the end of the reaction, the DNA concentration was measured with PicoGreen according to the manufacturer's protocol (Molecular Probes). 10 ng of the MDA-DNA was added for a real-time PCR. 2 different loci were investigated for their representation in the amplificat:

(a) a sequence which emanates from the locus named 1004

(Test: TGATGGCATTACTGGCACTTTGAGTTTTAC, Primer 1: GTCTTTAGCTGCTGAGGAAATG, Primer 2: AGCAGAATTCTGCACATGACG) and (b) sequence which emanates from the locus named 699

(Test: TGAACTGCTCCTTGGCAGGGATTT, Primer 1: TGCTCCCTGTCCCATCTG, Primer 2: AGACAGTATGCCTTTATTTCACCC).

The real-time PCR reactions were carried out in the QuantiTect Master Mix (QIAGEN) according to the protocol instructions.

The representation of the loci in the amplified DNA was measured in Ct values (threshold cycles=Ct). The Ct value is the PCR cycle in the real-time PCR, by which the fluorescence signal can be measured for the first time. The relative frequency of a sequence in the test can be therefore be ascertained by the Ct value. If, for example, a Ct value is 1 cycle smaller than in a comparison test, then this value corresponds to an initial quantity of DNA in the test run approximately 2-times higher as compared to the control run for the sequence measured.

Result:

-   -   (1) With increasing temperature in the heat treatment of DNA,         increasingly high CT values are measured.     -   (2) Both loci behave differently upon heat treatment: In the         cases of locus 699, a Ct shift of 9.6 cycles could be measured,         if you compare the values with a treatment at 75° C. or 95° C.         In any case, in the cases of locus 1004 another Ct shift of 5         cycles is measured. I.e. with increasing temperature of the heat         treatment of the DNA, the loci measured in the MDA amplification         product were proving worse and worse, even though introduced         into a unified quantity of the amplification product (10 ng) for         real-time PCR.

A Ct shift of 9.6 or 5 cycles corresponds to a representation of the sequence 699 or 1004 respectively 780* or 30* times less in the amplification product of the DNA, which was heated to 95° C. before amplification, compared to a DNA treated at 75° C. (* these values are based on the fact that in every cycle of the real-time PCR a duplication takes place).

FIG. 8 shows the Ct values of the real-time PCR from example 5.

EXAMPLE 6

This example shows at which temperatures an optimal temperature activation step takes place, in order to achieve as good a sequence representation in an SDR (here a multiple displacement amplification) as possible.

Test reactions: the MDA reaction was carried out with the REPLI-g reagents (QIAGEN): 10 ng isolated DNA was incubated at various temperatures for 5 min. Alternatively, DNA was prepared in control reactions in a multiple-step method consisting of (1) addition of KOH, (2) incubation of the DNA in the KOH solution for 5 min and (3) neutralisation of the alkaline solution for the REPLI-g reaction.

Subsequent to the heat treatment or chemical denaturation, the solution containing DNA was amplified in a REPLI-g reaction. The reaction was carried out at 33° C. for 8 h.

After the end of the reaction, the DNA concentration was measured with PicoGreen according to the manufacturer's protocol (Molecular Probes). 10 ng of the MDA-DNA was added for a real-time PCR. 2 different loci were investigated for their representation in the amplificat:

(a) a sequence which emanates from the locus named 11/12

(Primer 1: TTTCTGTAACAGCTAAGGAC, Primer 2: TAGGGTGCTTAGCTGTTAAC) and (b) sequence which emanates from the locus named 665

(Primer 1: CTCTTGCTCAGCCTATATAC, Primer 2: GTAGAAAATGTAGCCCATTAC.

The real-time PCR reactions were carried out in the QuantiTect Master Mix (QIAGEN) according to the protocol instructions.

The representation of the loci in the amplified DNA was measured in Ct values (threshold cycles=Ct). The Ct value is the PCR cycle in the real-time PCR, by which the fluorescence signal can be measured for the first time. The relative frequency of a sequence in the test can be therefore be ascertained by the Ct value. If, for example, a Ct value is 1 cycle smaller than in a comparison test, then this value corresponds to an initial quantity of DNA in the test run approximately 2-times higher than in the control run for the sequence measured.

Result:

(1) With increasing temperature in the heat treatment of DNA, increasingly high CT values are measured. (2) The lowest CT value (so the best representation of the loci investigated here) emerges with a thermal preparation at a temperature of 65° C. to 85° C. (3) At these loci better Ct values were measured at temperatures of 65-85° C. than with the reference treatment by means of KOH. (4) It can be deduced from the comparison example 5, in which worse CT values were already measured at 85° C. than in the reference treatment by means of KOH, that the optimal treatment temperature is dependent on the locus of the genome in a cell.

FIG. 9 shows the Ct values of the real-time PCR of the locus 11/12 from example 6. FIG. 10 shows the Ct values of the real-time PCR of the locus 665 from example 6. 

1. A method for activating a nucleic acid for a polymerase reactions with the steps: (a) Heating a nucleic acid to a temperature of 55° C. to 80° C., (b) Cooling the nucleic acid to a temperature of 4° C. to 45° C. (c) Starting the polymerase reaction by the addition of a polymerase to the nucleic acid.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the polymerase in step (c) is a heat-labile polymerase.
 3. The method of claim 1, wherein the polymerase is a heat-stable polymerase.
 4. (canceled)
 5. The method of claim 1, wherein the polymerase reaction is a strand displacement reaction.
 6. The method of claim 5, wherein the strand displacement reaction is a multiple displacement reaction.
 7. The method of claim 1, wherein the nucleic acid is a DNA.
 8. The method of claim 1, wherein the nucleic acid in step (a) is heated to a temperature of 60° C. to 70° C.
 9. The method of claim 8, wherein the nucleic acid in step (a) is heated to a temperature of 65° C.
 10. (canceled)
 11. The method of claim 1, wherein in step (b) the nucleic acid is cooled down to a temperature of 15° C. to 42° C.
 12. The method of claim 11, wherein in step (b) the nucleic acid is cooled down to a temperature of 25° C. to 37° C.
 13. The method of claim 1, wherein the nucleic acid is present in an aqueous solution in a purified form.
 14. The method of claim 1, wherein the nucleic acid is present in a cell. 